Already, it's been a playoff season to savour in the NBA and NHL - and this is only Round 1

Minnesota Wild left wing Matt Moulson (26) hangs his head as members of the Colorado Avalanche celebrate a Paul Stastny goal in the third period during Game 7 of an NHL hockey first-round playoff series on Wednesday, April 30, 2014, in Denver. (AP Photo/Jack Dempsey)

2014-05-03 12:55:00

MIAMI - There have never been more than five Game 7s in the entirety of an NBA post-season.

There are five this weekend alone.

Just think, this is supposed to be merely the appetizer course to the annual hockey and basketball post-season feast.

Several more weeks will pass before anyone hoists the Stanley Cup or the Larry O'Brien Trophy. And if the start of these hockey and basketball playoffs were any indication—a record five Game 7s in the opening NBA round, plus three more do-or-die games so far in the NHL, not to mention flairs for the dramatic at just about every turn—what awaits could be epic.

"Does anybody even know what happened in the regular season, with how good the playoffs have been?" asked Miami Heat star LeBron James. "I don't even know what happened in the regular season. That's how great of a post-season it's been."

It's just getting started, too.

Saturday marked the first time in NBA history that there were three Game 7s on the same day. Sunday will be the 10th day the league has seen multiple Game 7s.

"This is what the NBA's all about, these pressure-type moments," said Brooklyn's Paul Pierce, whose Nets play at Toronto on Sunday. "These are the type of games that elevate the good players to great players, and we have so many of them coming up this weekend. It's an exciting time and we're going to enjoy it."

With good reason, too.

Television ratings are up, social media mentions are coming at rates like never before, and ticket resellers are commanding extremely high rates in most markets.

And maybe the best testament to the quality of these playoffs so far is this: There's two very significant and ongoing stories revolving around racism—one being the banning of Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling over comments he made, the other epithets being directed toward P.K. Subban, a black defenceman for the Montreal Canadiens. But even those matters have not been able to completely overshadow the product on the hardwood and ice.

"This league is far bigger than any one owner, any one coach, any one player," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said, while announcing Sterling's lifetime ban. "This institution has been around for a long time, and it will stand for a long time."

Out of the first 45 games in this NBA post-season entering Saturday, 30 of them were essentially still undecided entering the final minute of play. There's also been nine games decided by two points or less, including Damian Lillard's series-winning 3-pointer at the buzzer to give Portland a 99-98 victory over Houston on Friday night.

The Heat rolled to a four-game sweep of Charlotte. Washington needed just five games to oust Chicago. Portland took care of Houston in six games. Everyone else—including top-seeded Indiana and San Antonio—was forced to go the distance in the opening round.

"One through eight," Portland's Wesley Matthews said, asked about the magic seen so far in these NBA playoffs, "you never know what's going to happen."

Over the first 48 games in the NHL opening round, teams came from behind to win a staggering 28 times. There were a first-round record 10 comebacks from two-goal deficits or more, along with 14 overtime contests.

Plus, there was a true rarity: The Los Angeles Kings lost the first three games of their series with San Jose, then won the next four to advance, becoming just the fourth NHL club to pull off that feat.

"History is not for us," the Kings' Justin Williams said. "We look at it as we won four games in a row."

Remote controls around America are likely wearing down after the last couple weeks, replete with late nights in both the hoops and pucks world. The numbers are clear—people are watching in bunches.

The playoff viewership average of NBA playoff games on TNT is nearly 4 million total viewers, up 16 per cent from the comparable period a year ago. Since the playoffs started, TNT has won the nightly ratings battle among total viewers six times, along with 10 times each across the advertiser-coveted men age 18-34 and 18-49 demographics.

And in the NHL, while the numbers didn't come close to what the NBA was drawing, there was also marked growth, with NBC Sports Group saying first-round viewership was up 57 per cent over a year ago.

"This is the best time of year," Heat guard Dwyane Wade said.

Maybe sadly, the first rounds for 2014 will end sometime Sunday, pulling the curtain on perhaps the best opening couple weeks of a winter-sports post-season ever.

Then again, maybe the best really is yet to come. Hockey's second round is already underway—and it started with a pair of overtime thrillers.